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home>Sustainable Living>Insulating door and window framing

SUSTAINABLE LIVING
December 2008
Insulating Door and widow framing

During the energy audit that we had done on the house last month they ran a blower door test to evaluate the air leakage of the building envelope.  The total leakage came to about 120 square inches which is pretty good.  So while the big fan was sucking air out of the building we walked all round the building looking for cold spots with our hands and a thermal camera.  What we found was cold drafts coming from behind the door and window trim.  The images below show the thermal camera image of the dark blue (cold) air that is blowing in around the front door trim.  We marked each cold spot with a post-it note so I could deal with them later.
Thermal camera showing (blue) cold air leaksThermal camera showing (blue) cold air leaks
I removed the door trim to find that the builders had neglected to insulate the space between the framing and the door frame itself.  This gap ranged from less than 1/4" to over an inch in some windows.  The solution was to squirt Great Stuff foam into the gap, totally sealing and insulating the space to prevent air infiltration.
Door with trim removedGap between framing and door frameSpray foam filling the gap
I also found several windows with huge un-insulated gaps, one that required almost a full can of Great Stuff foam to fill.  Other windows were packed with fiberglass which is the typical way to insulate the framing space, but I prefer the total seal that foam provides.  I'm sure that I have removed many square inches of air leakage at this point.

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